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March 2010

Music

Five Questions for Eamon Murray

Beoga

The supergroup Beoga. Eamon Murray is at lower right.

Beoga takes Irish traditional music and turns it on its head, flips it sideways, yanks it inside out, tosses it up in the air, twists it like a pretzel, pounds on it with a meat tenderizer, and crams it into a wood chipper just for good measure.

Don’t worry. What comes out in the end might not be anything like a straightforward rendering of “Drowsy Maggie”—they’d probably pump poor Maggie full of Red Bull and tell her to wake the hell up. What it will be, instead, is a breathtaking (no, I mean it—you’ll literally be out of breath) and massively entertaining re-imagining of Irish traditional music.

All of which you can find out for yourself Saturday when the County Antrim-based band pulls into Reading for a 7:30 p.m. concert (and an afternoon workshop) at Albright College’s MPK Chapel.

All of the band’s musicians have deep traditional roots. You can’t re-imagine the genre if you are not already intimately familiar with it in the first place.

One member of the five-piece band is Eamon Murray, the frenetic, four-time All-Ireland bodhrán champion and possessor of a head full of curls and wild ideas. We caught up with him by phone as the band made its way by van from Baltimore to Ohio. Here’s what he had to say.

Q. The one thing I want to talk about is how different your performances are from your recordings. On your recordings, there are a lot of interesting little sound effects, and you’re accompanied by trumpet, saxophone, and electric guitar—and on at least one occasion by the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra. You’re not bringing the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra along with you, are you? You don’t have a kettle drum in your bodhrán bag?

A. I would love to be able to afford to bring all those people! You have to mix it up live. You’re never going to make it sound like it does in the studio. It’s a challenge—we really enjoy doing it. The guys all take extra lines. You compensate and make it sound the best you can. It’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Q. I’m always interested in how bands got together. What’s your story?

A. We got together seven years ago; myself and Seán Óg (Graham, button accordion and guitar) were playing together. But we all knew each other and had played together. The four boys, we all grew up in roughly the same area. Myself and Sean, since we were kids, were inspired by a lot of bands, like Dervish. It was just kind of around that time, when we were 16 and 17, that we decided it was time to get a band together. A few years after that, Niamh (Dunne, on fiddle) joined us.

Q. The band’s musical tastes are, in a word, eclectic. For example, I think “Please Don’t Talk About Me When I’m Gone” was your idea. This is a song that was a big hit … in 1930. And of course, there are so many apparent influences, not just traditional Irish music, but rock and jazz and klezmer. Where does all this come from?

A. We collectively have vast influences, some a bit classical and some on the jazzy end of things. I play drum kit, so I’m influenced by pop and more mainstream music. I can’t get over Bruce Springsteen—he’s awesome. We were listening to Michael Jackson yesterday. There’s a lot of pop mainstream stuff in the van. Nobody gets too taxed listening to it.

We (also) all come from musical families. We were all surrounded by a lot of stuff when we were young. Niamh comes from a family with deep roots in traditional music, as so many young Irish musicians do. Niamh’s father is a fantastic piper, so she’d have more knowledge of old pipers’ tunes. The rest of us have very musical siblings and have music in the family somewhere. We started going to the music festivals when we were 7 or 8 years old.

Everybody comes to the table with different ideas for songs or sets. So many bands get boxed into whatever genre they’re supposed to be in. Fortunately, that hasn’t happened to us yet. It’s interesting to just be able to mix things up and take license.

Q. Your music is so different—which is a good thing—that you’ve been described in many different ways. My personal favorite comes from an Irish music magazine: “Deranged Darlings.” What’s your favorite?

A. (Laughs.) I like that one! “Deranged darlings,” at least people understand what you’re trying to do. People don’t knock it because it’s not a purist approach.

Q. You’re one of the best bodhrán players in the world. (Are you blushing now?) How did you come to it?

A. I’m not blushing! Keep it coming! I started on the bodhrán when I was 7 or 8. That was after trying lots of other instruments in which I had no interest. From there it just kind of took legs. I progressed quickly as a child. I didn’t care about practicing—I just kind of hammered on. It was all taking shape by the time I was 11 or 12.

—–

The band will host an Irish music workshop from 5 to 6 p.m. It’s free and open to the public.

Ken Gehret & Irish Mist will play in the lobby from 6:15-7:15 p.m.

Tickets at Albright College Box Office 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.: (610) 921-7547 or at the door. $25, $35, 50% student discount with valid ID, 10% group discount for 10+ tickets

Visit www.starseries.org for full event details.

People

Another Day in the Sun for the Mount Holly Parade

Mount Holly Parade 2010

These young ladies enjoyed the spring-like weather from the back of a float. (Click on the photo to view more.)

Well, they did it again. All the other Delaware Valley St. Patrick’s Day parades seem to step off in rain, sleet and/or snow, with Arctic temperatures and cloudy skies.

In Burlington County, New Jersey, they appear to live a charmed life. It was cool, yes, but not cold. Bright sunshine. Not a cloud in sight. No wind. What’s more, I’m not sure they’ve ever had a bad day. Call it the luck of the Mount Holly Irish.

Check out the slideshow by clicking on the photo, above.

People

Levittown Parade Grand Marshals Are Irish At Heart

The Mignoni sisters: Ann, Carol, and Rosemarie.
The Mignoni sisters: Ann, Carol, and Rosemarie.

It’s said the Irish and Italians share two parts of the flag—the green and white—but for the Mignoni family, the connection is much deeper.

That’s why the three Mignoni sisters—Rosemarie, Carol, and Ann—were chosen as grand marshals of the Levittown St. Patrick’s Day Parade, which is scheduled for March 13.

Born to Carmen and Carolyn Mignoni, the sisters were raised in a modest apartment in the back of the family jewelr store on Mill Street in Bristol Borough. Carmen was a jeweler and watchmaker who loved Celtic designs, his wife Carolyn, an astute businesswoman with a heart of gold.

Mignoni Jewelers opened its doors in 1947 and the children were raised to keep those doors open and “support whoever came through them.” Their friends reflected the character of Bristol Borough—they came from many nationalities and walks of life. The Mignonis worked hard, and their business flourished.

The Mignoni children were taught the enduring values of faith, family, and respect. Parishoners of St. Ann Church, the family was deeply devoted to the Catholic faith. The family motto: “Honor to serve and help others.”

Over the years, Carmen developed a strong appreciation of the artistry of Irish goldsmiths. He started producing Irish designs, including Claddagh rings. When he died in 1994, his family members discovered his last effort sitting on his workbench—a St. Brigid of Kildare cross. To his daughters, it was a sign of the family’s love and commitment to the Irish.

For their continued support of the Irish community, particularly the Ancient Order of Hibernians, the Ladies AOH, and the Celtic Heritage Foundation, their philanthropy in support of the arts in Bucks County, and for keeping those doors open for whoever came through in need, we proudly salute our 2010 St. Patrick’s Day Grand Marshals, Carol Mignoni Ferguson, Rosemarie Mignoni Szczucki, and Ann Mignoni Mundy.

The 22nd annual parade kicks off at 10:30 AM at St. Joseph the Worker Church in Levittown on Saturday. For complete details, call 215-547-9332 or visit www.BucksIrishParade.com.

(This story was posted by Denise Foley. It was written by Thersa Gallagher.)

News

You Say Potatoes, We Say Poor Taste

Did you hear the one about the major fast food chain that ran a TV ad offering  unlimited fries and pancakes to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the end of the Irish famine?

Did you hear the one about the major fast food chain that ran a TV ad offering unlimited fries and pancakes to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the end of the Irish famine?

Did you hear the one about the major fast food chain that ran a TV ad offering unlimited fries and pancakes to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the end of the Irish famine?

Not funny? A lot of people agree with you—among them, the national president of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, Seamus Boyle, who fired off an angry letter to Denny’s over last weekend, and Philadephia Rose of Tralee Centre Managing Director Sarah Conaghan who quickly organized a protest and a Facebook boycott campaign. They made it clear to the South Carolina-based fast food chain: No one in the Irish community was laughing about a promotion making fun of a time in human history that led to the deaths of more than 1 million people. The ad was pulled from the airwaves on Tuesday.

But the protest wasn’t the Grand Slam it should have been.

Those who contacted Denny’s got this response via email:

“Denny’s has a history of using humor in its television advertising. It is certainly not the intention of the company to offend anyone or any group and we apologize if this spot has in any way. As a result of the feedback we have received from our customers the spot will no longer be on the air after Tuesday. We thank those who took the time to contact us.”

It was signed, “Denny’s Call Center.”

“It wasn’t even signed by a real person,” griped Conaghan, of Villanova, who called off her protest and turned it into a boycott of Denny’s on Facebook. So far, in less than a week, nearly 800 have joined the page. On it, one woman echoes many other protesters who wondered whether Denny’s would follow up with other offensive offers: “What’s next- Auschwitz Liberation pancake fest? Ethiopean Egg deal? References to any catastrophe- no matter how long ago is bad taste.”

The agency responsible for the ad, Goodby Silverstein and Partners in San Francisco, doesn’t answer the phone or provide an opportunity to leave a message, says Conaghan. Her Facebook boycott page provides the agency’s number for supporters to call.

Conaghan saw the ad while watching TV with her father, Tom, founder of the Irish Immigration Center in Philadelphia. “We were in shock,” she says. “My father grew up in Donegal, which was very hard hit, and he remembers walking with his father among the ruins of little cottages and fields where people had been evicted or died and his father could name family names. These were real people and there’s nothing humorous about it. Many of the survivors came to America so the history of the Great Hunger is linked forever to the history of Irish Americans.”

In Ireland, it’s called An Gorta Mor, the Great Hunger, because it was a man-made famine, a point AOH National President Seamus Boyle made in his letter to Denny’s, which he shared with www.irishphiladelphia.com.

“The ‘Potato Famine’, as it is sometimes called, was actually a forced hunger which took place in Ireland between 1845 and 1852, which killed over one and a half million of its people,” Boyle wrote. “This starvation. . . . was man made by the English absentee landlords who refused to let the Irish peasants eat anything other than the potato. This is well documented in history that while the Irish people starved for lack of one crop which happened to be their staple, the potato crop, meat, vegetables, corn and other foods were raised and harvested in Ireland and exported to England under guard to be sold for profit.”

“You have the audacity to make fun of the these people who died of starvation much worse than any genocide ever recorded in history, so that you can sell your product on the back of our dead ancestors. I have already contacted our members throughout the United States where Denny’s has a franchise to be ready to mobilize when needed,” Boyle wrote.

Like Conaghan, the AOH leader, a native of County Armagh who lives in northeast Philadelphia, isn’t satisfied with Denny’s apology. “It was a form letter that anyone could have put out,” he says. “It’s not appropriate. They got caught and they tried to get out of it.”

Many are calling for Denny’s to make a contribution to an Irish cause, like the Hibernian Hunger Project, an AOH national program that started in Philadelphia to provide food to the needy. But Boyle disagrees. “A few years ago a beer company did something similar and offered the Irish money, but I think that was a buyout. Instead of giving it to us as an ‘apology,’ I would rather see Denny’s give $800,000 to Haiti relief because that’s where the money is really needed today,” he said.

Arts, News, People

A Big Day for the Sunday Irish Radio Programs

Gerry Timlin: singer, guitarist, publican, and auctioneer.

Gerry Timlin: singer, guitarist, publican, and auctioneer.

Between phone-in pledges in the morning and a rollicking musical fundraiser in the afternoon at the Shanachie Irish Pub in Ambler, the Sunday Irish radio shows made more than $5,000. That will keep the Vince Gallagher Irish Hour and Come West Along the Road with Marianne MacDonald on the air at WTMR 800 AM“for a few more months,” MacDonald says.

Among the all-star lineup at The Shanachie: Dublin-born singer-songwriter John Byrne, the Bogside Rogues, Gerry Timlin (co-owner of The Shanachie) and his musical partner Tom Kane, fiddler Mary Malone, the Malones (Luke Jardel and Fintan Malone) and the Vince Gallagher Band, with Gallagher, Pat Kildea and Patsy Ward.

Timlin ran a rousing auction for a plethora of prizes, including a week’s stay at a County Clare cottage, a bike, and an autographed Flyers’ jersey, as well as concert tickets to some of the hottest tickets around, including Altan, Scythian, Eileen Ivers, and Dervish.

News, People

Pre-Parade Fun at CBS 3 Studios

Knute Bonner gets a double hug from the McCafferty girls, Bridie and Peggy, at the CBS 3 pre-parade party.

Knute Bonner gets a double hug from the McCafferty girls, Bridie and Peggy, at the CBS 3 pre-parade party.

“This is the best party of the season,” said one of the attendees at this week’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade party at the studios of CBS3.

And it’s not just the tables groaning with seafood that make it look like an “Under the Sea” theme event.

There’s music, camaraderie, a chance to brush shoulders with the folks that bring us news, sports, weather, and traffic. The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade is televised live on CBS and repeated again on St. Patrick’s Day on CBS3 and sister station, CW Philly.

You can see the fun and who was having it in our videos:

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Kevin Crawford and Cillian Vallely are heading to Coatesville this weekend.

Kevin Crawford and Cillian Vallely are heading to Coatesville this weekend.

A parade, a Blackthorn fundraiser, and three top notch traditional musical groups are on the bill for the weekend—and really, that’s not the half of it. March madness is in full swing and it has nothing to do with basketball.

First up, Saturday, the first parade to march down any street in the area heads down High Street in Mt. Holly. The Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade is always the first to go and it’s followed up by a music-filled after party.

But there’s music in the air everywhere this weekend. Annmarie O’Riordan takes the stage at the Irish Center on Friday night. She performed at the CBS3 Pre-Parade party last night and about 100 noisy partiers stopped in their tracks and just listened. This 20-year-old from Cork sang a cappella and commanded the room.

The incredible trad group from the Midwest, BUA, is taking over the stage at the Irish Center on Saturday night. They performed last year at the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival and at the Bethlehem Celtic Festival and deservedly earned many new fans on the east coast. The Ceili Group is bringing them back to Philly not only for a concert but for workshops on Saturday afternoon.

And for all you trad fans, two of my favorite performers, Kevin Crawford and Cillian Vallely of Lunasa, will be at the Coatesville Cultural Society on Sunday. They’re both stellar musicians, but with Crawford you get a second show—he’s one of the funniest guys I’ve ever met.

Here’s the rest of the weekend’s lineup:

Saturday

• It’s Gael Scoill III in Lawrenceville, NJ, two days of immersion in Irish language and culture for kids 7-17.
• Irish acoustic performer Raymond Coleman from County Tyrone has played with Shane McGowan (of Pogues fame), Paddy Reilly and U2 and is at Con Murphy’s Pub on the Parkway in Philly on Saturday.
• Join Jamison, the Seven Rings Band and the Timoney Irish Dancers at Queen Of Peace Parish in Ardsley on Saturday for their annual Irish Night.
• Paddy’s Well is playing at the AOH Division 6 Montgomery County Officer Jack Duffy St. Patrick’s Day Beef and Beer in Schwenksville.
• The Gloucester County AOH is also having its St. Patrick’s Day Party with the Broken Shillelaghs.
• Tenor Ronan Tynan will be warbling from the stage of the Keswick Theatre in Glenside

Sunday

• Gaelic Storm will be whooping it up at the Grand Opera House in Wilmington, DE, a step up from below decks on the Titanic (they were the band playing while Leonard DiCaprio danced in the James Cameron flick).
• The Annual St. Baldrick’s Fundraiser for Pediatric Cancer is being held at the Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood, NJ.
• Fiddlers Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas will be performing at Brittingham’s Irish Pub in Lafayette Hill on Sunday night, but will be offering workshops in a variety of instruments in the afternoon.
• The last of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day fundraisers will be held at the Springfield Country Club. Last year, more than 700 people showed up for a great party featuring Blackthorn, Irish dancers, food, drink, and a silent auction that raised oodles of cash for the financially strapped parade.
• A new play, “Yours, Isabel,” inspired by the real letters written by Isabel McMenamin to her husband during World War II debuts at Care One at Evesham in Marlton, NJ.
• The Tossers—we love that name—a Chicago group fusing Celtic, folk and punk rock (always an interesting combination) will be appearing at the Khyber in Philadelphia.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, you have the chance to meet Kevin O’Hara, author of “The Last of the Donkey Pilgrims: A Man’s Journey Through Ireland,” first at Fergie’s Pub in Philadelphia and then at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby. An ex-solider, Kevin O’Hara was unable to let go of his memories of the horrors of war. While in Ireland living with relatives, he decided to travel around the island in a donkey cart–1,800 miles with a shaggy donkey called Missy.O’Hara will be reading from his book and talking about his adventures at these special events organized by the Immigration Center.

The Brehon Law Society is holding its St. Patrick’s Day party at the Stotesbury Mansion (aka “Philo Club”) in Philadelphia on Thursday.

Also on Thursday: AOH Notre Dame Division 1 is carrying on its Irish Coffee Contest tradition in Swedesburg. This is always a good time, with free tastes for all comers.

Philadelphia’s own Rosaleen McGill, a talented traditional singer and member of the Philadelphia Ceili Group, will be appearing with Larry McKenna’s Irish Cabaret Show at the Paddocks at Devon on Thursday night.

For you Scythian fans—your boys are at TLA in Philly on Thursday night. These wild DC guys play a fusion of gypsy, rock, and Celtic music at a super-charged pace that make them an addiction.

If you’re not averse to doing a little traveling, The Big Apple Feis and St. Patrick’s Day Gala is on over the weekend in New York with an incredible lineup of stars, including Tony DeMarco, Girsa, the Trinity Academy of Irish Dance, and many more.

Closer to home, Ireland’s Minister for Social and Family Affairs Mary Hannafin will be coming to Philadelphia to spend parade weekend with us. There will be a reception in her honor at the Philopatrian Literary Institute in downtown Philadelphia, sponsored by the Irish Immigration Center.

That same evening, the Philadelphia Ceili Group is holding its annual St. Patrick’s Day Ceili with live music and dancing.

That brings us up to Philly’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade weekend. But more about that next week. Check out our calendar. There’s plenty more where this came from.

People

Remembering Jim Kilgallen

Jim Kilgallen

CBS3's Susan Barnett, Kathy Orr, and parade commentator Jim Kilgallen.

There are many stories about Jim Kilgallen, the larger-than-life founder of the Irish of Havertown, 2004 grand marshal of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade and owner of Kilgallen’s Tavern, who passed away on Saturday. Michael Bradley, director of the parade, has a favorite, which Kilgallen used to tell on himself.

“Once, when he was in his twenties, he went up to New York City with a bunch of guys from Philadelphia,” Bradley says. “They ran into a group of fellas from Ireland, and they all wound up in a pub. There was a lot of singing going on, and at one point, Jim himself got up to sing. Understand, he was always a big man. Anyway, he started to sing ‘If I had the wings of a swallow …’ when one of the Irish guys yelled out, ‘You’d never get your fat ass off the ground!'”

Jim Kilgallen never had a problem seeing the humor in life, Bradley says, even if it came at his own expense. An inveterate needler, he usually gave as good as he got. Even at the saddest times, Kilgallen had a talent for making his many friends smile. “At every funeral luncheon, he would get up and say, ‘Nobody wants anything sad. You had to sing a song or tell a story,” Bradley recalls. “He’d have everyone laughing by the time they were leaving.”

Now it falls upon Kilgallen’s family and many friends to find a way to smile through the tears.

James J. Kilgallen, Jr., was born in West Philadelphia in 1931—on St. Patrick’s Day, appropriately enough. He was first-generation Irish; his parents Bridget and James Kilgallen hailed from Castlebar, County Mayo. He was a longtime member of the Mayo Association of Philadelphia and a member of Ancient Order of Hibernians Division 65, now named after Joseph E. Montgomery. Since 1990, he served on the executive board of the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association. He led the association as president in 1999 and 2000. In 2002, the Haverford Township Commissioners honored him as the Honorary Mayor of the 33rd County of Ireland-Havertown.

Tributes like that came Jim Kilgallen’s way in his life, though he never sought them out. Far from it, says Bradley: “He didn’t have a big ego.”

Bradley first came to know Kilgallen well in 1990. That was the year Bradley joined AOH 65. Through his parents, Bradley was already familiar with the older man. Bradley’s mother Bernie went to St. Rose of Lima School with Kilgallen, and his father Mickey attended St. Thomas More High School at about the same time he did.

Still, the friendship didn’t really kick in until Bradley became a Hibernian member of AOH Joseph E. Montgomery Division 65. Kilgallen and two other division members, Jack McNamee (the 2008 grand marshal, who died in late August) and Paul J. Phillips, took Bradley under their wing. All of them knew of Bradley’s interest in the parade—he was then a relatively wet-behind-the-ears volunteer marshal. Within a couple of years, Bradley had moved up to head marshal, and in time his mentors were backing him as a prospective member of the board. Kilgallen, he says, spearheaded the move.

(Bradley lost that year to the famous Johnny Doc of Local 98 fame, who has since become a close friend and trusted adviser, but moved onto the board—with the strong backing of the three men he calls his “posse”—in a subsequent election.)

The older gentlemen, Bradley says, were able to see what others might not have—that great institutions like the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association need a periodic infusion of new blood. None of which suggests that they themselves were ready to be put out to pasture. On the contrary, says Bradley, “Those three guys, they just worked and worked and worked.”

Bradley has never been a stranger to hard work, but he learned much from his mentors. Kilgallen in particular “taught me more about people than anything I’ve ever learned in my life. He taught me to look past factions, to include everyone and make them all your friends.”

Kilgallen also impressed upon Bradley (and anyone else who would listen) the importance of not being an Irish snob. “He used to say, the people who come out on only one day a year and wear green plastic hats, they’re also Irish,” says Bradley. “We need them all. We’re much stronger together.”

Wise, to be sure—but also wickedly funny. Kilgallen the publican used to enjoy verbal jousting with his pal McNamee, who owned the popular Springfield restaurant C.J. McGee’s. “They used to tease each other unmercifully,” says Bradley. “Jack used to call Jim ‘the saloon tycoon.’ Jim would call Jack ‘the restaurateur.’”

Over the years, as the parade came to dominate Bradley’s life—particularly as March closed in—both men would show up at his door to help. “They would come over to my house and help put badges together, whatever needed doing” he says, “and tell Linda (Bradley’s wife) what an idiot I was. They’d drive over here and help me—and tease.”

Friends like that, Bradley says, are simply irreplaceable, and he and his colleagues on the parade committee will do their best to make sure they’re remembered as the St. Patrick’s Day Parade heads up the Benjamin Franklin Parkway on Sunday, March 14, bigger and better than ever.

Bradley, for his part, will hang on tight to the happy memories. The memories, he says, keep him going when the pressures of parade planning close in, when the living room is full of badges and raffle tickets, and the phone never stops ringing.

Still, Bradley says, the sense of loss is inescapable. “It’s like I lost two dads in six months,” he says. “Jim’s death hit me doubly hard. It’s like I lost a father, my mentor and one of my best friends.”

Funeral details are as follows: Beloved husband of Margaret (nee Philbin) Kilgallen. Loving father of James M. Kilgallen, Maureen A. (Michael) Keeney, Theresa M. (Scott) McPherson, and Kevin F. (Joanne) Kilgallen. Brother of Nora Heiss. Also survived by 11 grandchildren and 1 great grandchild. Relatives and friends are invited to his views Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. in the funeral home of John Stretch, E. Eagle & St. Denis Roads, Havertown, and to his Mass of Christian Burial following Saturday at 11 a.m. in St. Denis Church Havertown. Interment in Ss. Peter & Paul Cemetery. In lieu of flowers an offering in Mr. Kilgallen’s name to the American Heart Assn. Memorial Fulfillment Center 5455 N. High St. Columbus, Ohio 43214.